Quietum Plus Tinnitus Supplement Is a Scam — Here's the Proof

Contrast

Member
Author
Benefactor
Dec 19, 2017
7,465
Clown World
Tinnitus Since
late 2017
Cause of Tinnitus
noise injury
A new scam emerged a few days ago, and it's already flooding Google search results with false claims about a "top-secret U.S. government protocol" supposedly being a cure for tinnitus. In reality, the supplement consists of exotic plants, with only one ingredient—ginseng—showing any serious evidence of helping in some cases of tinnitus.

The product is marketed as a cure-all, with fictional claims that 197,357 people have been "cured" of tinnitus. It also features dozens of fake testimonials showing thousands of fabricated likes and comments.

The marketers even claim that the supplement regenerates nerve fibers, though they fail to specify whether they mean central or cochlear nerves—and, of course, they provide no evidence to support this claim.

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Here is my report on Quietum Plus:

Quietum Plus Report - hosted by KeepAndShare.com

Quietum Plus Report - hosted by Google Drive

Pro tip "Ctrl+Click" opens a URL in a new tab without redirecting you to a new page.


Fake Testimonial Example (1-3):

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Fake Testimonial Example (2-3):

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Fake Testimonial Example (3-3):

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Here is something for the image search results to keep people from buying this garbage:

Quietum Plus.png
 
This one is extra scammy because they say "FDA approved" but actually mean the factory they used was certified by FDA at some point to produce an FDA approved drug (which the scammers bought and then used in their marketing).

The FDA does not "approve" supplements but they relied on people not knowing that.
 
Quietum Plus is doing the exact same gimmick as another tinnitus scam, Sonus Complete here.

Domains in Question

thequeitumplus.com
quietumplus.com

Both use different vendors. BuyGoods and ClickBank, respectively. You can read more about BuyGoods being notoriously scam friendly haven here.


In their scam advertisement videos they are lying that consumers need to avoid the "fake" Quietum Plus and purchase the real one.



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TheQueitumPlus.com (left), QuietumPlus.com (right):

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Both are a scam, and they both are connected.
 
I went through 3 bottles of Quietum Plus with absolutely no results. It's an obvious snake oil scam and it's a shame con artists can get away with things like this!
 
It's literally insane that people can read their marketing and think "yeah, this sounds legit." Lol.
I went through 3 bottles of Quietum Plus with absolutely no results. It's an obvious snake oil scam and it's a shame con artists can get away with things like this!
Oh well, just think you paid some stupid tax and learnt from it. We all tend to do it when we are suffering and are desperate for relief.
 
The name itself is a bit of a red flag. I've had much more expensive lessons, so chalk it up to experience. Especially since experience comes from making mistakes. Make enough of 'em and you can end up wise, LOL.
 
I saw a video ad for this today - It seems very enticing, especially to someone like me who is desperate.

However, there are many red flags in the marketing presentation and @Contrast's report is enough to make me not pursue this.

The ingredients laid out in @Contrast's report don't even match the ingredients in the video now.

So somewhere along the line - the recipe to cure tinnitus completely changed - which makes no sense.

Ingredients: mucuna pruriens, maca root, ginger, dong quai, muira puama, catuaba powder, damiana, ashwaghanda, piperine, sarsparilla root, asparagus + vitamin A , several B vitamins, Zinc, L-tyrosine and L-arginine.

Don't buy this.

For those that did, they are saying 60-day money-back guarantee and I would try to pursue it.

I bought Liam Boehm's PDF once upon a time and it had a money-back guarantee which I pursued after and was refunded.
 
I saw a video ad for this today - It seems very enticing, especially to someone like me who is desperate.

However, there are many red flags in the marketing presentation and @Contrast's report is enough to make me not pursue this.

The ingredients laid out in @Contrast's report don't even match the ingredients in the video now.

So somewhere along the line - the recipe to cure tinnitus completely changed - which makes no sense.

Ingredients: mucuna pruriens, maca root, ginger, dong quai, muira puama, catuaba powder, damiana, ashwaghanda, piperine, sarsparilla root, asparagus + vitamin A , several B vitamins, Zinc, L-tyrosine and L-arginine.

Don't buy this.

For those that did, they are saying 60-day money-back guarantee and I would try to pursue it.

I bought Liam Boehm's PDF once upon a time and it had a money-back guarantee which I pursued after and was refunded.
They probably just use whatever ingredients they can wholesale on the cheap. All these tinnitus supplements are akin to dropshipping.
 

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